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Home Exclusive Mental Health Dementia Alzheimer's Disease

Scientists map the structural and chemical differences between Alzheimer’s disease and late-life depression

by Bianca Setionago
May 27, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Alzheimer’s disease and late-life depression produce markedly different patterns of brain shrinkage and chemical disruption, despite sharing several early symptoms. These findings could ultimately help doctors tell the two conditions apart sooner, according to new research published in the *Journal of Affective Disorders*.

Both Alzheimer’s disease and depression in older adults are extremely common, and they have long frustrated clinicians with their tendency to look alike in the early stages. Both can cause memory lapses, low mood, and reduced motivation, making it difficult for doctors to distinguish and correctly diagnose them. Furthermore, late-life depression is an independent risk factor that roughly doubles the chance of developing Alzheimer’s later on.

To better understand how these conditions affect the brain, researchers sought to compare brain structure and underlying chemistry in both patient groups. Previous studies had looked at each condition separately, but rarely compared them directly using both structural brain imaging and molecular profiling tools.

Led by Shuo Yang and Xuemei Wang of the Affiliated Psychiatric Hospital of Anhui Medical University in China, the team recruited 33 people with Alzheimer’s disease, 38 people with late-life depression, and 40 healthy older adults as a comparison group. All participants were aged 60 or older and right-handed.

Participants underwent high-resolution MRI brain scans to map regions of gray matter shrinkage. The researchers then used a specialized software tool to overlay these brain maps against existing databases of neurotransmitter and cell-type distributions, linking the areas of brain shrinkage to specific chemical systems and cells.

The structural brain findings demonstrated stark differences between the two conditions. Compared to healthy controls, Alzheimer’s patients showed extensive shrinkage in some of the brain’s most critical memory hubs—particularly the hippocampus and surrounding regions, as well as the cingulate cortex and a region called the precuneus, which is part of the brain’s default-mode network.

When compared directly to the late-life depression group, Alzheimer’s patients showed even greater and more widespread shrinkage, affecting large areas of the temporal, parietal, frontal, and occipital lobes. By contrast, the late-life depression group showed no statistically significant differences in brain volume compared to healthy controls.

The molecular analysis told an equally revealing story. Both conditions disrupted the brain’s serotonin system—the chemical messenger most often associated with mood. Both groups also displayed signs of impaired energy production at the cellular level, specifically involving mitochondria, the microscopic structures responsible for generating cellular energy.

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However, beyond these shared features, the two conditions diverged considerably. In Alzheimer’s disease, brain shrinkage was linked to marked reductions in receptors for the cholinergic (acetylcholine) and dopaminergic (dopamine) systems, highlighting the characteristic loss of synapses in the disease.

Late-life depression, meanwhile, showed a distinctive pattern where brain shrinkage was linked to increased dopamine and serotonin transporter activity, elevated levels of a specific glutamate receptor type (NMDA), and reduced blood flow to the brain. The researchers suggest these patterns likely reflect a functional disruption caused by chronic stress rather than the irreversible neuronal death seen in Alzheimer’s.

Finally, the two conditions showed opposing patterns regarding a specific type of brain cell called a PVALB interneuron, which helps regulate brain activity. In depression, brain shrinkage was correlated with a loss of these cells. In Alzheimer’s, however, brain shrinkage occurred in areas where these cells seemed to cluster together, possibly reflecting an early, hyper-excitable state as the brain tries to compensate for toxic damage.

As the authors summarize: “AD and LLD exhibit a ‘partially overlapping yet markedly divergent’ profile in gray-matter atrophy patterns, neurotransmitter signatures and cellular phenotypes, supporting the notion that the two disorders share common biological pathways but progress along distinct trajectories.”

However, there are some limitations. For instance, the healthy control group was drawn from a publicly available dataset collected with different scanner equipment than the patient groups, which introduces potential measurement inconsistencies despite the researchers’ use of statistical correction methods. Additionally, overlaying structural MRI scans onto generalized chemical atlases can only show correlations; it cannot prove exactly what is happening inside individual patients’ brains.

The study, “Gray matter structural and molecular signatures in Alzheimer’s disease and late-life depression,” was authored by Shuo Yang, Xuemei Wang, Yan Yan, Jianbo Zhang, Yuyue Wei, Dai Zhang, and Wenjun Yao.

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